Coming to a missile silo near you: the end of the strategic triad

DoD photo of USN boomer

As the Pentagon’s “efficiencies review” unfolds, one Cold War mainstay of the US military posture is inevitably going to be retired – namely, the land-based portion of the strategic missile triad. The Pentagon is tasked with coming up with $400 billion in savings over the next decade, and so this long-discussed option (and old Mark Thompson favorite from his Swampland days) is finally going to come to pass – according to my sources in the Building.

No real losses in terms of our secure second strike, because the land-based portion was always the most vulnerable, but expect military hardliners to squeal mightily, especially as they may suspect follow-on harm to their cherished missile defense programs.  But since even there, the most flexible options tend to be theater- and sea-based (my opinion), expect this logic to go through.  One thing for the US to sell land-based missile defense to others, but quite another to spend the money to maintain the land-based portion of the triad.  This way, the Navy’s “boomers” (costliest leg of the stool) and USAF’s strategic bombers feel that much more secure – budget-wise – in the battles to come. It makes far more sense to maintain our technological edges in those categories vice those holes in the ground.

A long overdue call, and if it frees up money to modernize warheads, then so much the better.

Related Topics: Air force, defense budget, military spending, navy, Air Force, Missile Defense, National Security, Navy, Nuclear Weapons
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